Ijtihad, Rethinking Islam (20 Mar 2017 NewAgeIslam.Com)

Muslim Scholars Must Go Back To the Teachings of the Prophet and Rethink Issues Related To Religious Pluralism Afresh

By Waris Mazhari

March 12, 2017

Islam aims at enabling people to rise above
narrow boundaries of colour and race and work together for welfare and justice
and help each other. The Treaty of Medina is a brilliant illustration of this
objective. After the Prophet’s demise, Muslim history went through many ups and
downs. Yet, even then people of other faiths often enjoyed considerable
religious freedom, although not everywhere and at all times. ....

The Prophet Muhammad exemplified the
highest level of virtues and spirituality, to teach which he was sent to the
world. The Prophet spent 13 years in Mecca after having received Prophethood,
during which he quietly worshipped God, engaged in conveying God’s message, and
patiently faced persecution at the hands of his opponents. In Medina, he
received from God the opportunity to establish a polity, which he set up on the
basis of pluralism and common values and principles. Accordingly, at the
Constitutional level, Jews and the polytheists (Mushrikeen) were given the same
rights as Muslims. In this way, the state of Medina, headed by the Prophet, was
the first regularly-established polity to be based on the concept of
multiculturalism.

The Charter of Medina that outlined the
structure of this polity was the first written Constitution in the history of
Islam. According to this treaty, all those who were bound by it, Muslims as
well as non-Muslims, enjoyed equal rights. Muslims and Jews (there were no
Christians in Medina) were given the status of a united Ummah. Ibn Hisham
relates in his biography of the Prophet that according to the Constitution of
Medina, the religion of the Muslims was for the Muslims, and the religion of
the Jews, for the Jews.

According to the Quran (5:47), every religious
community should be given complete internal autonomy:

“Therefore, let
those who follow the Gospel judge according to what God has revealed in it.
Those who do not judge by what God has sent down are rebellious’’.

Not only should every religious community
have full freedom of belief and worship, but it should also have the freedom to
judge its own affairs according to its laws, administered by its own judges.
That is why the Prophet could not limit the range of rights and freedoms given
by the Quran to non-Muslims in the polity that he headed.

In the course of his peaceful mission of
Dawah or inviting people to God, the Prophet had to engage in armed
confrontation with some of his opponents on some occasions. These were battles
of a defensive nature, as the Quran (2: 192; 9: 36) clarifies. These battles
aimed putting an end to the religious persecution that was a legacy of the age
of imperial despotism and was the biggest barrier to the exercise of freedom of
belief and thought. This is what is meant by the term Fitna in the Quran. This
Fitna was ended during the time of the Prophet.

The Prophet’s movement was not a political
one. Rather, it was a purely religious and ethical movement. However, in the
early biographies of the Prophet that came to be compiled after his demise, the
battles in which the Prophet had been engaged were given particular focus, and
so these biographies themselves came to be known as Maghazis or
battle-chronicles.

In the medieval period, some Muslim rulers
who were confronted by non-Muslim powers, such as the Byzantines, and others
who wanted to expand the sphere of territories under used Islam for their own
purposes and sought to portray Islam as a political project. And so, in this
environment of confrontation and conflict with people of other faiths, a
certain political image of Islam came to be constructed that did not reflect
Islam’s true spirit. The crystallization of Islamic law in the form of Fiqh or
Muslim jurisprudence in the fourth century of the Islamic century was also
greatly influenced by this environment, as reflected, for instance, in the
invention of the concept of the world being divided into Darul-Islam
(‘abode of Islam’) and Darul-Harb (‘abode of war’), the notion of
offensive jihad, and several rules about Dhimmis or non-Muslim subjects that
the world simply cannot accept today.

Muslim scholars must go back to the
teachings of the Prophet and rethink issues related to religious pluralism
afresh, unhampered by such medieval accretions.

In our understanding of God, it is
important to remember that according to Islam, God is the Sustainer of all
creatures. He loves and protects all of them. He will decide the fate of every
person on the Day of Judgment. God has made man as a dignified creature. That
is why all human beings—be they Muslims or others—deserve respect and dignity.
This point is expressed by the Hanafi jurist Ibn Abidin al-Shami (1783-1836),
who says that from the point of view of the Shariah, every man is dignified and
respectable, even if he is someone who denies the truth.

Islam supports pluralism. In fact, its
ideological and practical structure is based on it. In Islam, diversity is
presented as a requirement of nature and also as beauty. It sees the
differences of languages and colours among human beings as among the signs of
God.

Thus, the Quran (30:22) says:

And of His signs
is the creation of the heavens and the earth and the diversity of your
languages and your colours. Indeed in that are signs for those of knowledge.

It also says (49:13):

O mankind, indeed
We have created you from male and female and made you peoples and tribes that
you may know one another.

The Quran (2:256) relates, as a clear
principle, that there is no compulsion in religion—that people can choose to
follow the religion or ideology of their choice:

There shall be no compulsion in religion

Elsewhere, the Quran (18:29) says :

Then whosoever will, let him believe, and
whosoever will, let him disbelieve.

It is against the Creation Plan of God that
everyone should conform to one way of thinking or one way of behaviour. Thus,
the Quran (10: 99) says:

Had your Lord pleased, all the people on
earth would have believed in Him, without exception.

The Quran (64:2) also relates:

He it is Who
created you, then some of you are disbelievers and some of you are believers.

In this way, Islam accepts that along with
true believers (Momins) there will also be deniers (Munkirs), taking the
existence of both to be natural realities.

Every community has its own mentality,
environment, natural capacities and the possibilities of rebutting or accepting
Truth. That is why God has established a law (Shiratun) and a way (Minhaj) for
each community. The Quran leaves the choice of one’s religion and one’s action
to each person:

‘For you is your
religion, and for me is my religion’ (109:6)

‘For us are our
deeds, and for you are your deeds’ (28:55)

Another expression of the importance of
pluralism in Islam is the fact that the Quran (22:40) condemns the destruction
of places of worship of both Muslims as well as others. In doing so, it
mentions churches and synagogues before it mentions mosques:

If God did not repel the aggression of some
people by means of others, cloisters and churches and synagogues and mosques,
wherein the name of God is much invoked, would surely be destroyed. God will
surely help him who helps His cause—God is indeed powerful and mighty.

This Quranic verse indicates that God has
taken it as His own responsibility to protect non-Muslims and their places of
worship. The treaties that the Prophet entered into with the people of Najran
and Hirah, many of whom were Christians, provided for full freedom and autonomy
for non-Muslims.

The understanding of Islamic pluralism that
emerges from the Quran and the practice of the Prophet indicates that relations
between Muslims and people of other faiths and persuasions should be based on
joint efforts to promote goodness, justice, and equality. ‘Believers, be strict
in upholding justice, the Quran (4:135) says. The Quran (5:8) gives great
stress to justice in inter-community relations. Thus, it lays down:

Believers, be steadfast in the cause of God
and bear witness with justice. Do not let your enmity for others turn you away
from justice. Deal justly; that is nearer to being God-fearing.

On the issue of equality, the Prophet
declared that people (and this includes Muslims as well as non-Muslims) are
brothers of each other, and that they are the equals of each other, like the
teeth of a comb.

Islam aims at enabling people to rise above
narrow boundaries of colour and race and work together for welfare and justice
and help each other. The Treaty of Medina is a brilliant illustration of this
objective. After the Prophet’s demise, Muslim history went through many ups and
downs. Yet, even then people of other faiths often enjoyed considerable
religious freedom, although not everywhere and at all times. However, as
Muslims became politically dominant over a large part of the world, prejudices
against people of other faiths did creep in. In this regard, the corpus of fiqh
that developed in this period of Muslim political dominance failed to retain
Islam’s true universal spirit.

TOTAL COMMENTS:- &nbsp 2

Thanks for quoting the Holi Quran in support of Individual Rights and Rights of Non Muslims guaranteed by Islam. We need such Articles which promote Harmony.

By Prof. P.S. Bhandari - 3/21/2017 8:23:01 AM

Mazharisaab is doing exactly the right thing by going back to the original sources and finding the message of peaceful co-existence and pluralism in Islam. This is the kind of work that needs to be intensified several folds.

By Ghulam Mohiyuddin - 3/20/2017 1:38:33 PM

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